FRANKFURT, Aug 9 ― European shares had their best day in almost two months yesterday as upbeat trade data from China and a steadying of its currency helped to calm some fears of recession and a further escalation in Sino-US trade tensions.

The pan-European STOXX 600 index rose for a second day, closing 1.7 per cent higher, swept up in a global rally after days of turmoil sparked by an escalation in US-China trade tensions last week.

All major indexes in Europe were up more than 1 per cent, although a fall in stocks trading ex-dividend kept a lid on gains in London's FTSE.

Data showed July exports in China rose at their fastest since March, while a fall in imports was not as bad as a forecast, soothing worries that the protracted and escalating trade war will tip the world into recession.

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Trade-sensitive tech and basic resources indexes led the gains, with no sector in the red.

The materials sector closed 2.5 per cent higher, ending an 11-session losing streak during which it lost almost 16 per cent.

The yuan recovered some ground against the dollar, although China's central bank set its official midpoint below the seven yuan to the dollar threshold for the first time since the global financial crisis.

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“Today's fixing is a message the People's Bank of China has no definitive line in the sand but are only allowing the yuan to weaken on their terms and at a reasonable pace to mitigate possible outflows,” wrote Stephen Innes, managing partner at VM Markets.

“So the fear of rapid depreciation is fading.”

But as September 1 nears ― the day 10 per cent tariffs on US$300 billion (RM1.25 trillion) of Chinese imports are to take effect, traders remain cautious on the possibility that the PBoC could continue to nudge the fix lower, especially if there is no reversal in Washington's tariff position, Innes says.

The central bank had let the yuan slide to its lowest in more than a decade earlier this week, raising fears it would use its currency as the new front in its trade dispute with the United States.

These uncertainties have pushed investors into bonds and gold and prompted central bankers around the world to get ahead of the storm clouds by easing monetary policy.

On the earnings front, Zurich Insurance Group surged nearly 4 per cent after the insurer said it was set to beat its 2019 financial targets. This sent the Swiss main index 2.3 per cent higher in its strongest day in more than seven months.

But sportswear firm Adidas slumped 2.2 per cent after disappointing second-quarter sales.

Danish brewer Carlsberg rose 11.3 per cent to top Europe's main index after it raised profit expectations for 2019. British fund supermarket Hargreaves Lansdown was also up by 11.8 per cent after a forecast-beating rise in full-year assets. ― Reuters